5.5/10
Senior Film Conservator

A definitive 5.5/10 rating for a film that redefined the boundaries of cult cinema. How to Break 90 #6: Fine Points remains a cornerstone of transgressive art.
You should absolutely watch this today if you love golf history or just enjoy dusty, weird relics of early cinema. But if you hate sports or want an actual story, this will feel like watching paint dry in black and white. 🏌️♂️
It is basically ten minutes of legendary golfer Bobby Jones showing some guys how to not suck at golf. The setup is so incredibly awkward that it made me laugh out loud.
Some guy in a flat cap stands there looking like he has never held a stick in his life. He asks Bobby a question, and Bobby just launches into this super calm, almost hypnotic explanation of hooking and slicing.
The sound quality is so old and crackly. Every time the club hits the ball, it sounds like a tiny pistol going off in a hollow room.
I swear, the way they framed these shots is so strange. The camera just stares at Bobby's hips for like thirty seconds to show his weight shift.
It has that bizarre, slightly surreal quality you find in early silent comedies like Day Dreams, except everyone here is deadly serious about turf.
Honestly, the tip about backspin actually made sense to me, and I do not even play. He explains it like he is talking to a child, which I appreciated.
But then the short just... ends. No big wrap up, just a quick wave and we are done.
It is a total fragment of history, and that is why I kind of love it.
Do not expect a masterpiece. Just enjoy the weirdly soothing vibes of 1933 sports instruction.